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Sound advice to anyone else who likes those authors and hasn't yet sampled the delights of Rankin's far fetched fiction.

Only reason I didn't mention him in that sentence was that I (wrongly) assumed people wouldn't be aware of him.

The Greatest Show Off Earth and Hollow Chocolate Bunnies of the Apocalypse are probably my two particular favourites and he's one of the few authors of which I've bought almost all of their books. I really want to throw the phrase "transperambulation of pseudo cosmic antimatter" into a talk/paper/viva but I don't have the balls!

Oh and Dance of the Vodoo Handbag as well. Got to love Laz and his four locations.

Last edited by Lambchops; 17-09-2011 at 12:28 AM.
Reason: Remembering how much I loved Dance of the Vodoo Handbag

I always thought that Ian M Banks should have just chucked away the whole on Sursamen plot and focused on the holographic Oct ship thing, that could have been an interesting mystery but they kind of forget it like most of the plots.

Just finished off Zero History by William Gibson. The third (and one presumes final) chapter in his 'Blue Ant' Novels. The story picks up some time after the events of Spook Country and revolves around the further adventures of Hollis Henry Ex-member of a defunct cult band 'The Curfew' and now freelance journalist & Milgrim, a reformed drug addict with a keen eye for detail, whom both find themselves working (with some degree of never really qualified reluctance) for the whimsical and enigmatic Hubertus Bigend the CEO of Blue Ant.

Overall? Well it's an enjoyable enough romp (2.5/5). Though not quite as profoundly interesting as Spook Country was, given that there was some sense of menace to that story. My big criticism would be that everything is a little bit too easy breezy in a Oceans eleven kind of way. Hollis is tasked with discovering a big fashion secret, but barely seems to have to fall out of her fancy boutique hotel room and walk down the street before stumbling across clues that put her on a not particularly exciting (or taxing) Easter egg hunt to the truth of things. The central premise doesn't seem to justify the lavish wallet and trust thrown at the two protagonists by Hubertus Bigend, or why in Hollis' case she's so reluctant to work for him. 'work' consisting of being chauffeured around a lot, drinking endless coffees, using her iphone incessantly (everyone does) and talking to friends, and friends of friends. Albeit Bigend is painted like some larger than life Bond Villain style entrepreneur, his only seeming crime is that of having enough money to bankroll his own curiosity. Hardly white slave trading, or arms dealing at the end of the day. There's an antagonist thrown into the mix in the books latter half, but he's so non existent in many ways, that he seems little more than a device upon which Gibson is hanging a plot.

Currency Wars by Hongbing Song, a book series currently consisting 3 books, written in Chinese.

Mr. Song is a IT specialist who happened to work as senior IT consultant of a variety of some very powerful western financial institutes. Now he is back in China to work in a large China's financial institute.

Last time I posted in the thread "The 'Things you will NEVER understand' Thread" about inflation and money problem and you mates provided some exciting and useful insights. After that, I found this series too great that I must share with you. Unfortunately I still cannot found English translation of this series. I do happen to locate the offer by Amazon.com for Book 2, but also the original Chinese version from Taiwan:http://www.amazon.com/Currency-Wars-...7533030&sr=8-3

This series is a treatise on conspiracy theory of international bankers' control over currency systems of different Western powers, and how they extended their influence to the Third World and Eastern economies (Japan included), and the financial systems based on this currency system. I've read Book 1 and 3 and is to read Book 2.

Book 1, without subtitle, is a brief introduction on how bankers gained control of European economies, then extended their influence over USA through the "unconstitutional" right to issue USD through private Federal Reserve System. This is the book that predicted the fall of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the two US financial institutes Mr. Song used to work for as senior IT consultant, but had left by the time he wrote the book.

Book 2, subtitle "World of Money Power", outlined the 18 influential banking powers, most originated from Western / Central (Germany to be exact) Europe, except 2 from the USA.

Book 3, subtitle "High Boundary of Finance", focused on China (my country) and Japan in the 19-20th centuries. How they reacted differently while the western banking powers came to the East, and therefore had completely different fates over the 2 centuries. To sum up, Japan, with its own financial powers established long before the coming of the West, successfully resisted the western banking power and therefore built up its own economic power until its total defeat in WWII. China had no financial institutes strong enough against the west, and economic power started to decline since the Opium War in 1839-40, which Mr. Song argued was intended by the British at that time primarily to destroy the silver standard of China.

I doubt those factual information presented in the series is anything new. You can easily find them in other publications without referring to Mr. Song's references. And not even the conspiracy theory is new. Bankers have been labeled "Banksters" for long, and usually took blame during economic downturns for the last few decades I've been living. But he's the one invented the term "Currency Wars".

P.S. Last chapter of Book 3 contain Mr. Song's opinion on personal investment on silver. It doesn't reflect my opinion on investment. I am just here to recommend a reading, that's all. As usual, for any investment decision, do you own homework and decide accordingly.

Rereading Agatha Christie novels. If you can have comfort food then Christie novels must be comfort books for me (Poirot and Marple, at least. The rest are generally too annoying to bother with).
So I'm reading books one ex left behind in order to take my mind off a current ex which makes me think of the first ex... This is also not going to end well.

Before that, I reread Wilfred G. Burchett's Vietnam - Inside Story of the Guerilla War. Burchett spent eight months with the Vietcong in 1963-64 as one of the very few Western people who did that. The book seems a little naive now. Everything is pretty much unicorns and rainbows between the Vietcong, the mountain tribes and the peasants, but then, maybe it was like that early on before the US officially entered the war. Certainly, psychological warfare would have had much greater effect on Vietnamese soldiers, most of whom had been forced to join an army that was mainly used against their own countrymen, than it would have later on US soldiers, so things could be done with less killing. The war was probably 'kinder' then than later. Still, it's a bit hard to believe how nice it all was when you've read other books about the Vietnam war and Burchett's book does seem a little like propaganda (though, it feels like he believed it).
Worth reading if you have an interest in the war.

Juggling a few at the moment, but I gotta buckle down and finish them.. in this order hopefully: Ravenor Omnibus by Dan Abnett, Thank you for Arguing by Jay Heinricks, Already Dead by Dennis Johnson, and assorted chapters from the Configuring Windows Server 2008 AD (for work) Cert Program.

Just finished A Dance with Dragons, and I always have collections of HP Lovecraft on hand

I have 7 books in my queue, and I'm a bit unsure on what to start on next. The windup girl, dance of dragons, the name of the wind, a couple of norwegian books which you probably haven't heard of, the eisenhorn omnibus and before they are hanged. I just finished space marine so maybe some of 40k fluff would suit me.

I've been reading the '4 hour body' by Tim Ferris (I need to lose a few pounds and tighten up a bit). It's pretty interesting tbh as Ferris's philosophy is very much in maximizing gains whilst minimizing effort (thus freeing you up to do other things, our time is precious after all). Sure one way to get yourself into shape is to punish yourself for hours at the gym every other day (I used to do that before I tore all the tendons in my right shoulder a couple of years back), but a far better approach is to look at using your bodies natural burn rate, coupled with a carb free diet and some short but effective exercises to promote muscle gain. He's heavily into tracking as well as means to gauge improvement and incentivise personal commitment, but also honest enough to acknowledge that strict adherence is not necessary or probable (he encourages controlled binging 1 day a week).

I've yet to get into it fully (I've ordered in some bathroom scales that read BMI etc, which have yet to turn up), but there's a lot of really interesting titbits in there. One thing he turned me onto was this site: - www.habitforge.com. Essentially the psychological rule is it takes 21 days to make a habit stick, so you set out a habit (in my case getting up at 7am every day) and then they email you every day to track your progress. If you don't follow through then the 21 day clock gets reset. It's gamification for sure, but a really interesting idea. Anyway I've been impressed with what I've read so far. The bigger challenge is going to be acting upon it, however I'd recommend it.

Been reading Cities of the Red Night by William S. Burroughs. He's obviously not for everyone, but if you've been interested in his work, but have been put off by how hard Naked Lunch or the Cut-Up books are to get into then this is a great starting point because it's actually quite straightforward and has a fairly normal plot.
That said, as a huge fan of his work, even I'm starting to get tired of all the drug references. It also lacks the dense wall of ideas that seem to prop up his aforementioned book - I guess that's the price you have to pay for a Burroughs book that's easy to follow.

Just finished David Foster Wallace's (DFW) non-fiction collection A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again, which was mostly brilliant. The most well know pieces in the collection are the title piece, DFW goes on a 7-day Caribbean cruise, and Getting Away from Already Being Pretty Much Away from It All, DFW goes to the Illinois State Fair, and both are spectacular. There's also a fantastic piece on David Lynch, written for Premiere around the time of the shooting of Lost Highway, and a surprisingly compelling (it probably ended up being my favourite despite my not caring one iota about tennis) account of fringe tennis pros i.e. the guys just outside the big names. What makes his essays brilliant is he uses the commissioned brief as a spring board for various insightful and resonant ruminations on the modern human condition, all delivered via his unqiue blend of intellect, humour (even laugh-out-loud funny at times), post-modern hijinks and naked humanity. I'd probably rate his other non-fiction collection Consider The Lobster ever so slightly higher, but both are great starting points if you're looking to get into perhaps the greatest writer of the last 15 years. I've only got The Broom of the System and Girl with Curious Hair left and then I'm all out of 'fresh' DFW :(

Next up is the short story collection Lost in the Funhouse by John Barth.

Originally Posted by Nalano

Just got into Reamde by Neal Stephenson.

I've been looking to get into some Stephenson. Bearing in mind that great length doesn't bother me so much (I jumped right in with Infinite Jest for DFW), which of his novels woudl you recommend?

I recently finished If on a Winter's Night a Traveller by Italo Calvino. It's great. Strange, but great. It's been recommended in this thread before, and for a good reason. I doubt it's to everyone's taste, but give it a try anyway - it's a slim book so if you don't like it, it won't last long.

Just started A Feast For Crows (ASoIaF book 4), by George R.R. Martin.